Sexual Abuse & Blaming Your Inner Child

I’ll start by saying this article doesn’t apply to everyone who identifies as a victim or survivor of childhood sexual abuse. This article is for those of you who blame yourself – for your body’s reaction during the abuse or for confusing feelings of excitement that you may have experienced while the abuse was happening. In my work, I have come across many survivors who experience intense feelings of shame and self-hatred for how they reacted or didn’t react during what they now understand was a sexually abusive experience during their childhood. These feelings can create confusion and make it difficult to label what happened to you without also labeling yourself.

What’s Normal Childhood Sexual Development?

Sexual development begins when you’re born, not when you turn 18. Yes that’s right–children begin developing sexually and experiencing sexual curiosity from the time they’re infants. It’s a normal and healthy part of childhood sexual development for young children to begin exploring their own bodies, engaging in masturbation when they’re alone, engaging in sexual play such as “doctor” with other kids their age, and sneaking peeks at adult family members and children of the opposite sex in all stages of undress. None of these experiences are considered sexually abusive and are a normal aspect of childhood development and curiosity. For more information on normal childhood sexual development, check out these great charts by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

Before we move on, just sit with that for a second. If you were like most children, you began exploring your sexual curiosity as a young child (an infant even), experimenting with sensations of pleasure at physical touch at your own hand, and feeling curious about your body, about the bodies of adults, and about the bodies of the opposite sex. None of these things are shameful. None of them are wrong or disgusting. They are just a natural part of sexual development.

A Child’s Nature

As adults, we often forget that we were once children too – limited in our understanding of the world, dependent on others to protect us, and with little to no control over many situations. We did not have the foresight or the knowledge to understand the things we experienced as they were happening.

Now we look back, with adult eyes, condemning our childhood selves for being naïve, curious, compliant – ultimately condemning our childhood selves for having ever been children.

It’s important to take a look at the inherent nature of children and really let it sink in before you go condemning your childhood self. Here is a list of 6 common traits most children share.

  1. Children have a natural tendency toward curiosity –this is hardwired into them and it is part of their natural drive to learn and explore the world around them. Children often follow their curiosity either to a point of understanding whatever it is they are exploring or until they become afraid and then retreat.

  2. Children, in particular, have a natural curiosity about sex, sexual acts, sexual images, sexual touch, and physical sensations of stimulation from a very young age – even though they don’t fully understand sexual acts or sexuality. (See above for more specifics on how children typically act on their sexual curiosity)

  3. Children have a natural tendency to seek affection and attention – this is also hardwired into them. It is part of their survival instincts to seek attention, nurturing, protection and caring from those they perceive to be in power. Children perceive power in age differences – regardless of whether that person is only 4 years older or 40 years older.

  4. Children are generally trusting of older individuals, especially those who are known to them. Children typically take the approach of trustworthy until proven otherwise. Remember “stranger danger?” This is a good example of how we literally have to teach children to be untrusting of certain people as it’s not in their nature.

  5. Children often keep secrets – while not hardwired into children, secrecy is one of a child’s very few means of control over situations which feel threatening in some way. By keeping a secret, children get to feel some sense of control over preventing something bad from happening.

  6. Children are taught to be compliant toward anyone older than them – this is a necessary lesson in early childhood as kids are taught to comply with the expectations of parents, older siblings, family members, teachers, coaches, and others in their life.

Take a moment to really look at these each individually and think of how these factors may play a role in childhood sexual abuse. These six factors are extremely important because they are the factors that are most often linked to shame. They are the factors most often used by victims to blame themselves as an adult looking back on their experiences – when in reality they are simply part of a child’s nature and thus why children are most susceptible to abuse. Without an abuser present to harm you, these natural childlike tendencies aren’t foolish or dangerous, they’re just a normal and healthy part of childhood. It’s not your fault they were used against you.

A lot of times we lose our childhood perspective as we become adults. We forget how we felt, how we saw the world, the things we did, the things that mattered to us. We forget we were innocent. We begin holding our 7-year old selves accountable for not reacting the way we would have as an adult. We blame ourselves for not already knowing the things we couldn’t possibly have known, for not protecting ourselves from things we didn’t understand the harm of, and for not telling someone a secret that felt like it was big enough to end the world. The secret still feels big to you now – imagine how big it felt to you then.

You may blame yourself for the abuse. It may feel impossible to lift that blame from your shoulders and place it where it belongs, with your abuser. Instead, begin by focusing on just forgiving yourself for having once been a child. Forgive yourself for having felt and thought and acted as a child would. Start there, the rest will follow.

If you or someone you know is struggling with feelings of shame and self-blame for childhood sexual abuse, call us today to make an appointment to get started. You are not alone.

We can help.

If you or someone you love is struggling with the effects of sexual trauma, please reach out. We offer trauma therapy with CBT Therapists in Orlando and online throughout the state of Florida. Call today or send us your info and we’ll reach out for a free consultation to see if one of our therapists would be a good fit.

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